The Tale of Tariffs Round Two for the US Economy

This commentary was originally posted on April 8th.

With the latest round of US tariff measures announced in early April, we’ve downgraded our US economic outlook. We expect slower growth and higher inflation for 2025. If this plays out, we think the Fed will cut policy rates by 75 basis points in 2025, possibly more.

The back and forth over specific tariff measures remains very fluid, as recent headlines can attest, and if the policies announced April 2 don’t stay in place, the situation could change considerably. But if they do stay in effect, the impact could be dramatic. We think those policies, combined with cuts in domestic spending and government jobs, would reduce growth in 2025 US GDP to a range of 0% to 0.5%, with a significant chance of recession.

Tariff Impact Flows Through to US Price Levels

The April tariffs have boosted the effective tariff rate by roughly 25% from last year, which we expect will push prices for US consumers and businesses higher. Slower growth and declining commodity prices may blunt some of the impact, but we’ve raised our inflation forecast for this year to 4% for the core Consumer Price Index. That’s about 1.5% higher than core inflation would have been without tariffs.

Those higher prices equate to a roughly $4,000 cost for the average US family, which is almost 10% of post-tax median income. It’s true that price increases in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic were even bigger, but aid from the federal government helped US households to weather that earlier period. Such payments seem highly unlikely this time around.

The expected slowdown isn’t a directional change from our prior forecasts. Household spending has already slowed this year (Display) and falling measures of consumer confidence suggest more to come—even before last week’s tariff announcements. Of course, confidence can be volatile, and other factors can influence spending. But we think the impending tariffs on top of existing economic data skew risks clearly to the downside going forward.

US Household Spending Has Slowed This Year